Endurance - about Shackleton's doomed voyage to the Antarctic. My dad had this Shackleton phase when I was in my late 20's and I rolled my eyes. Then I saw it on Hoopla (free audiobooks) and gave it a go. Glad I did. It's non-fiction that reads a bit like HP Lovecraft. Surreal, impossible conditions, and how a bunch of dudes handled it. Lansing's prose is excellent.
Making of the A-bomb - I was surprised at how compelling the book was--I couldn't put it down. Besides winning a bunch of awards (Pulitzer, NBA), the best push I can give is that it made me think about the possibility of the human race. Not in an apocalyptic sense, but in the triumphal sense. A bunch of people got together and thought and engineered and broke the ******* atom. What if another crisis arose and we needed to...idk...save the planet from humans, or destroy a meteor, or so on? To me it is the single most impressive feat of humankind, and this book does it justice.
Originally Posted by Sting
Just finished dark places by Gillian Flynn. Really good. Not sure what to read next. Kinda thinking American history
Gift of fear.....a good insight into our subconscious ability to risk assess, yet this skill is drowned by our social condition of being polite
The psychopath test......a look into psychopaths in a light hearted way
Born to run...... About ultra running with indigenous people of the copper canyons
The 7˝ Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle
The most clever mystery book I've read this life, not finished yet, so won't recommend yet.
No name yet. The 4th book by JQ Davis.
I started reading the Harry Potter books.
A friend strongly recommended Empire of the Summer Moon and Blood and Thunder. I have no doubt they are entertaining, but how are they relevant?
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